Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was at the park Saturday. Parents brought two toddlers and a preschooler. One arrived first and cleaned the swings, picnic table and slide with Clorox wipes. Then she texted her husband to bring the kids. She kept the toddlers busy on the clean equipment. He stayed with the preschooler on the equipment or kicking a ball they brought. I was the only other person there, and I was just walking.
I would feel fine if we were the only ones on the playground. But what would they have done if several other kids showed up? I have a toddler and a preschooler. They would both be thrilled to see other kids and I don't think I could get them to keep any sort of distance.
Anonymous wrote:I was at the park Saturday. Parents brought two toddlers and a preschooler. One arrived first and cleaned the swings, picnic table and slide with Clorox wipes. Then she texted her husband to bring the kids. She kept the toddlers busy on the clean equipment. He stayed with the preschooler on the equipment or kicking a ball they brought. I was the only other person there, and I was just walking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:are people actually using playground equipment? We go on trails etc but not the equipment.
The equipment is a lot less dangerous than kids playing all together and breathing and coughing on each other.
Anonymous wrote:are people actually using playground equipment? We go on trails etc but not the equipment.
Anonymous wrote:are people actually using playground equipment? We go on trails etc but not the equipment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven’t taken my 1.5 yr old charge to a playground but we do spend every morning in a park with huge lawns and a running trail. It’s a long (two mile) park but only a half block deep. Parents and nannies have been great about choosing only empty lawns for their child to play (there are lots of them). We also live in a city that mandates face masks.
But runners and old people suck! I have my charge, in his stroller, as far to the right as I can go on the path and a few idiot old people walk down the center of the path, two-abreast, without masks. Yesterday I told one couple to please move six feet from the stroller because I can’t mask a baby. The woman told be to stay home. I called her an idiot and flagged a cop on her.
Runners coming toward us are usually good when I wave them away bit they rarely have masks on.
You go girl! I’d definitely want a nanny with balls like you protecting herself and my child.
I live in a state where masks are still optional and was recently at a park watching many people in the neighborhood including parents and nannies maskless, chatting it up and sitting closely while watching their tween boys share footballs and preschoolers share swings and tree house monkey bar sets. I was baffled. They even have food trucks come and people were paying with cash and barely sanitizing. Once one person in that neighborhood gets it, they all will.
Anonymous wrote:I haven’t taken my 1.5 yr old charge to a playground but we do spend every morning in a park with huge lawns and a running trail. It’s a long (two mile) park but only a half block deep. Parents and nannies have been great about choosing only empty lawns for their child to play (there are lots of them). We also live in a city that mandates face masks.
But runners and old people suck! I have my charge, in his stroller, as far to the right as I can go on the path and a few idiot old people walk down the center of the path, two-abreast, without masks. Yesterday I told one couple to please move six feet from the stroller because I can’t mask a baby. The woman told be to stay home. I called her an idiot and flagged a cop on her.
Runners coming toward us are usually good when I wave them away bit they rarely have masks on.
Anonymous wrote:I was at the park Saturday. Parents brought two toddlers and a preschooler. One arrived first and cleaned the swings, picnic table and slide with Clorox wipes. Then she texted her husband to bring the kids. She kept the toddlers busy on the clean equipment. He stayed with the preschooler on the equipment or kicking a ball they brought. I was the only other person there, and I was just walking.